INDEX
Vacation: Dauphin Island
The CLUI LIC Program
CLUI Kiosk On View In NYC
The Henry Ford Experience
Dixie Mall R.I.P
The Landscape Of Corn
Ground Zero Los Angeles
A Visit To The Getty Villa
City Insight: St. Louis
Cementland
Report From New Orleans
FEMA Trailers
Life On The Line At Derby Line, VT
State In Focus: Alabama
Book Reviews
Newsletter Acknowledgements |
Book Reviews
Interpretative
Centers: The History, Design and Development of Nature and
Visitor Centers
Michael Gross and Ron Zimmerman, University
of Wisconsin-Stevens Point Foundation Press, 2002
An examination
of the forms, techniques, and architectures of these increasingly
common, single purpose, and sometimes sophisticated structures. Visitor Centers
are so often considered with postmodern irony that much of their richness
and artistry is missed. This book of mostly captioned photographs is written
for the interpretive trade, and is meant to stimulate and encourage better
design by highlighting a few dozen of the best recent work in the field,
such as the Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump interpretive center in Alberta.
In the Desert of Desire
William L. Fox,
University of Nevada
Press, 2005
Another surprising, idiosyncratic humdinger from left field that
lands right on target from Bill Fox, the prolific poet and sage
of the Big Empty. Here he looks at the current state of the arts
in Las Vegas, from Steve Wynn’s art collecting practices, to
the showmanship of Zumanity, and makes it seem important to the
rest of the world. This is no outsiders fear and learning from
Las Vegas, this is a smart dissection of this important like-it-or-not
place, from someone who knows their way around. Contrary to popular
belief, Las Vegas is NOT going away any time soon.
Infrastructure: A Field Guide to the Industrial
Landscape
Brian
Hayes, Norton, 2005
This book landed in our library like a bomb. Here are the main
chapters: Out of the Earth, Waterworks, Food and Farming, Oil
and Gas, Power Plants, The Power Grid, On the Road, The Railroad,
Bridges and Tunnels, Aviation, Shipping, and Wastes and Recycling.
520 pages, and hundreds of color photographs by the author over
the past 15 years. Its only problem is also its highest achievement:
its broad scope and large size. If each chapter were a separate
book, then maybe it really could be a “field guide” and not the
encyclopedia that it really is. None the less, this book is a
landmark, and should be absorbed by everyone, no matter how long
it takes (we are still chewing).
LIC In Context: An Unorthodox Guide to
Long Island City
Paul
Parkhill and Katherine Gray, Furnace Press, 2005
A useful, surprising, and unconventional street guide to 54 points
of interest in the urbanscape that lies in the shadow of Manhattan.
Gone Tomorrow: The Hidden Life of Garbage
Heather Rogers, New
Press, 2005
A history and analysis of the main channels of the waste stream
- hauling, dumping, landfilling - and the reasons why we generate
so much of it in the first place. Garbage is a fairly new invention,
connected with mass production of things made out of paper, plastic,
metal, and glass. In the last 30 years, Americans have doubled
the amount of trash we collectively generate, and now packaging
– not even really a product itself - takes up around 30% of landfill
space. The author also argues that while recycling makes us feel
better, the majority of the contents of those carefully sorted
curbside bins ends up in landfills anyways. And making us feel
better about our waste, even if it involves donations to Goodwill,
actually supports and sustains our consuming behavior, rather
than addressing it.
Garbage Land: On the Secret Trail of Trash
Elizabeth Royte,
Little Brown and Co., 2005
A personal journey of discovery along the waste stream, this
one starts with a quantified study of the author’s own domestic
waste habits, heads out the door into the DSNY truck route, to
the transfer station in Red Hook, to the incinerator in Newark,
and the landfills of Pennsylvania. Along the way, she tells the
story of waste handling, solid and liquid, and the people she
encounters along the way that operate the various parts of the
disposal machine.
Greetings from the Salton Sea
Kim Stringfellow, Center for
American Places, 2005
Like we say on the back cover, “Kim Stringfellow’s odyssey into
the Salton Sea excavates cultural relics and treasures that surprise
and astound. She weaves the fragments, tatters, and shards that
she found into a salty tale that makes one nostalgic for the
sea’s future, something that seems always around the bend. She
has adds an eloquent new exhibit to this museum of Decay.”
Quonset Huts: Metal Living for a Modern
Age
Julie Decker and
Chris Chiei, Princeton Architectural Press, 2005
Its about time someone made a new book about this common and
sensible architectural form, something that is found all over
the nation, and is used in so many different ways (Quonsets may
in fact be the closest thing to a “national” architectural form).
This is the book on the subject. Another gem from Princeton Architectural
Press.
Underground Buildings: More than Meets
the Eye
Loretta Hall,
Quill Driver Books, 2004
The most complete overview of the variety of underground building
types, mostly in the USA. Includes pretty much every type of
enterable architectural structure underground (but not infrastructure),
from shopping concourses, libraries, to the Manhattan gold reserves.
In its scope it covers the spectacular and the mundane, as some
underground spaces are just like above ground spaces, but without
windows.
The Works: Anatomy of a City
Kate Ascher, The Penguin Press,
2005
Clear, nearly child-like illustrations depict and describe a
full range of urban infrastructure, using New York City as the
example. Road, rail, subways, freight, ships, air cargo, power
transmission, water supply, liquid and solid waste treatment
and removal, and even a Manhattan-wide pneumatic tube network
(in use until 1953) are discussed with great simplicity and clarity.
Like a David Macaulay or Richard Scarry book, but purely for
adults and with more clinical, digitally produced imagery.
River Days: Exploring the Connecticut from
Source to Sea
Michael
Tougias, Appalachian Mountain Club Books, 2001
From the isolation of the Fourth Connecticut Lake, a beaver pond
in northern New Hampshire, 300 yards from the Canadian border,
to the Interstate 95 overpass at Old Lyme, Connecticut, near
the river’s discharge into Long Island Sound, the Connecticut
River is New England’s Mississippi. This book, written in the
first person, is an account of the author’s segmented journey
down the river in kayaks and canoes. It is replete with descriptions
of the human and natural history of the regions along the river’s
banks, and has practical information and maps of use to other
canoists, kayakers, or other travelers floating through this
wet and muddy New England corridor.
The Stray Shopping Carts of Eastern North
America: A Guide to Field Identification, Julian Montague, Harry N. Abrams Inc.,
2006
There is something innocent about shopping carts, these simple
little creatures of commercial conveyance. They are designed
for such a limited and single-mined function, to live their lives
within one store, and out to a parking lot. But oh how they roam,
when commandeered by renegades. They seem to end up all over
the city, so common that they are often seen, but hardly noticed,
an ethereal, nearly substanceless, ubiquitous urban form, like
a pigeon. There is something tragic about the many ways they
meet their demise, submerged in fetid urban drainage, or buried
in the brush of brownfields. Many of us might have thought about
something like this book, but the author, Julian Montague, thought
about it the hardest, and then went and did it. Hundreds of images
and a tight classification system to aid in identification. (“Class/Type
B/20,” for example, is a “true stray” - as opposed to a Class
A, a “false stray”- that is “marginalized” and buried by a bulldozer).
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